A nurse practitioner resume needs to show your certification, specialty, and scope of practice clearly — for both a hiring physician and a hospital ATS. Concrete patient population, clinical procedures, and the systems you charted in beat vague claims of being a dedicated provider.
Certification and licensure — NP license, board certification (FNP, AGNP, PMHNP), and DEA, up front.
Specialty and population — the patients and setting you practice in, stated clearly.
Scope of practice — diagnoses managed, procedures performed, and prescribing authority.
Systems and outcomes — EHR used and any quality or panel-management results.
Most tools pad a nurse practitioner resume with competence-claims. Resumetion replaces them with concrete facts from your real experience.
Dedicated nurse practitioner committed to providing compassionate, high-quality care to patients across the lifespan.
Managed a panel of 1,500 primary-care patients as an FNP, independently diagnosing and treating acute and chronic conditions, charting in Epic, and improving the clinic’s diabetes A1c control rate from 58% to 71%.
Applicant tracking systems rank on terminology from the posting. These come up often for nurse practitioner roles — include the ones that match your real experience.
Paste the job posting and your notes — get a keyword-aligned, ATS-ready resume in minutes. Preview free.
Build my resume